Sowetan

SA pupils to learn Kiswahili at school

Marine sciences also on curriculum

- By Yoliswa Sobuwa

Basic education minister Angie Motshekga announced on Monday that Kiswahili has been approved as a language that will be offered to pupils in South African schools. It will be offered at public, private and independen­t schools.

“This was approved by the Council of Education Ministers (CEM). There are currently 15 nonofficia­l languages listed in the national curriculum statement as optional subjects,” said Motshekga.

“These include French, German and Mandarin. There is unfortunat­ely no African language in the list of languages. Kiswahili is a bantu language with lexical and linguistic similariti­es with many African languages spoken on the continent.”

She said Kiswahili was the third most spoken language in Africa after English and Arabic. “Kiswahili has the power to expand to countries that never spoke it and has the power to bring Africans together. It is also one of the official languages of the African Union. We are confident that the teaching of Kiswahili in South African schools will help to promote social cohesion with our fellow Africans.”

The implementa­tion of the language will start in 2020. Another curriculum addition is that of marine sciences which was also approved by the CEM.

The department has been working with the Two Oceans Aquarium to develop a maritime sciences curriculum since 2017. The draft curriculum was submitted to Umalusi for evaluation in March.

“We are also working on introducin­g coding as a subject in our schools. Coding is unique in the way it brings all diverse skills together and this is one of the big advantages of teaching pupils to code,” Motshekga said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa